The North Carolina men's basketball team defeated Oregon 77-76 in a Final Four matchup. The Tar Heels will play the Gonzaga Bull Dogs for the National Championship on Monday night, a year after losing to Villanova.

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GLENDALE, ARIZ. — Isaiah Hicks was nowhere to be found in the North Carolina locker room. The Tar Heels had just won their Final Four matchup over Oregon. The media mobbed Kennedy Meeks, Justin Jackson, Joel Berry and the rest of the team. Even Shea Rush took a few questions.

But Hicks was tucked away behind a curtain, propped up on the training table with a giant elastic bandage wrapped around his injured left quad. A few players answered questions about him. Theo Pinson picked a box score off the ground and glanced at it, Kenny Williams peeking over his shoulder.

"Isaiah ..." Pinson said, shaking his head.

Alex Kormann

North Carolina forward Isaiah Hicks (4) fades away over forward Oregon Dillon Brooks (24) in the teams' Final Four matchup on Saturday in Phoenix.

Williams joined in as they peered at the numbers. Two points, 1-of-12 from the field. Hicks hadn't shown up on the court, either. And if he doesn't Monday when the Tar Heels take on Gonzaga in the national title game, North Carolina will fly home empty-handed for the second year in a row.

This hasn't been the year Hicks should have had, given what a force he was last season for the Tar Heels as the ACC Sixth Man of the Year. Maybe it was unfair to speculate whether or not he could make a similar jump to Brice Johnson, who turned from an average forward into a perennial All-American during the 2015-16 season. But it wasn't far-fetched to think he could at least contend for an All-ACC spot.

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And it looked for a while like he might do just that. He had 16 points on 7-of-7 shooting from the field in the season opener. He scored in double figures in 11 of the Tar Heels' first 14 games. There was a four-game stretch in mid-January where he averaged 18 points per game and converted on 71.0 percent of his field-goal attempts.

But things went south after Hicks injured his hamstring the day before the first Duke game this season. When he came back, he just looked off. He was thinking too much, whether it was about getting back to where he was at or just not getting injured again.

In his first five games back on the court, he averaged 5.4 points and 4.0 fouls per game. He followed that up with four incredibly solid games, starting with his senior night domination of the Blue Devils and ending with UNC's win over Texas Southern in the first round of the NCAA Tournament — a period when he averaged 19.0 points and 7.0 rebounds over the course of four games.

But since then, he has gone right back to a shell of his former self.

Hicks' performances in the Sweet 16 and Elite Eight were rough. In the first, he fouled out after playing just 17 minutes. And in the second, he only knocked down two of his five shot attempts. But Saturday's performance against the Ducks could be the worst of the bunch.

In those two previous games, Hicks struggled in part because he was too tentative. What's worrisome is how bad he played despite being exponentially more aggressive against Oregon. His first attempt of the night was a would-be dunk that was rejected by the Ducks' Jordan Bell. His second — just 19 seconds later — was an open layup that clanged off the side of the rim.

The quad contusion limited Hicks to seven minutes in the second half, but he managed to get six shots up in that span. He missed all of them.

This is the type of performance Hicks will have to avoid come Monday. Unlike most teams in the nation, Gonzaga can match well with UNC's size down low. Bulldog centers Przemek Karnowski, standing at 7-foot-1 and 300 pounds, and 7-footer Zach Collins — who posted 14 points, 13 rebounds and six blocks against South Carolina in the Final Four — present a unique challenge for the North Carolina frontcourt.

Assistant coach Sean May mentioned postgame that the staff will take the same approach with Hicks that it did after the Elite Eight win over Kentucky. The coaches know how important he'll be if the Tar Heels hope to hold down the Gonzaga bigs.